Three-dimensional network aluminum porous body, electrode using the aluminum porous body, and nonaqueous electrolyte battery, capacitor using nonaqueous electrolytic solution and lithium-ion capacitor using nonaqueous electrolytic solution, each using the electrode

ABSTRACT

A three-dimensional network aluminum porous body in which the amount of aluminum forming a skeleton of the three-dimensional network aluminum porous body is uneven in the thickness direction, and a current collector and an electrode each using the aluminum porous body, and a manufacturing method thereof. In such a sheet-shaped three-dimensional network aluminum porous body for a current collector, the amount of aluminum forming a skeleton of the three-dimensional network aluminum porous body is uneven in the thickness direction. For example, in the case where a cross section in the thickness direction of the three-dimensional network aluminum porous body is divided into three regions of a region  1 , a region 2 and a region 3 in this order, each region is configured so that the average of the amounts of aluminum in the region 1 and the region 3 differs from the amount of aluminum in the region 2.

TECHNICAL FIELD

The present invention relates to a three-dimensional network aluminum porous body which is used as an electrode for a nonaqueous electrolyte battery (lithium battery, etc.), a capacitor (hereinafter, also referred to as a “capacitor”) using a nonaqueous electrolytic solution, a lithium-ion capacitor (hereinafter, also referred to as a “lithium-ion capacitor”) using a nonaqueous electrolytic solution and the like.

BACKGROUND ART

Metal porous bodies having a three-dimensional network structure have been used in a wide range of applications, such as various filters, catalyst supports and battery electrodes. For example, Celmet (manufactured by Sumitomo Electric Industries, Ltd., registered trademark) composed of three-dimensional network nickel porous body (hereinafter, referred to as a “nickel porous body”) has been used as an electrode material for batteries, such as nickel-hydrogen batteries and nickel-cadmium batteries. Celmet is a metal porous body having continuous pores and characteristically has a higher porosity (90% or more) than other porous bodies such as metallic nonwoven fabrics. Celmet can be obtained by forming a nickel layer on the surface of the skeleton of a porous resin having continuous pores such as urethane foam, then decomposing the resin foam molded body by heat treatment, and reducing the nickel. The nickel layer is formed by performing a conductive treatment of applying a carbon powder or the like to the surface of the skeleton of the resin foam molded body and then depositing nickel by electroplating.

On the other hand, as with nickel, aluminum has excellent characteristics such as a conductive property, corrosion resistance and lightweight, and for applications in batteries, for example, an aluminum foil in which an active material, such as lithium cobalt oxide, is applied onto the surface thereof has been used as a positive electrode of a lithium battery. In order to increase the capacity of a positive electrode, it is considered that a three-dimensional network aluminum porous body (hereinafter, referred to as an “aluminum porous body”) in which the surface area of aluminum is increased is used and the inside of the aluminum is filled with an active material. The reason for this is that this allows the active material to be utilized even in an electrode having a large thickness and improves the active material availability ratio per unit area.

As a method for manufacturing an aluminum porous body, Patent Literature 1 describes a method of subjecting a three-dimensional network plastic substrate having an inner continuous space to an aluminum vapor deposition process by an arc ion plating method to form a metallic aluminum layer having a thickness of 2 to 20 μm.

It is said that in accordance with this method, an aluminum porous body having a thickness of 2 to 20 μm is obtained, but since this method is based on a vapor-phase process, it is difficult to manufacture a large-area porous body, and it is difficult to form a layer which is internally uniform depend on the thickness or porosity of the substrate. Further, this method has problems that a formation rate of the aluminum layer is low and production cost is high since equipment for manufacturing is expensive. Moreover, when a thick film is formed, there is a possibility that cracks may be produced in the film or aluminum may exfoliate.

Patent Literature 2 describes a method of obtaining an aluminum porous body, including forming a film made of a metal (such as copper) on the skeleton of a resin foam molded body having a three-dimensional network structure, the metal having an ability to form an eutectic alloy at a temperature equal or below the melting point of aluminum, then applying an aluminum paste to the film, and performing a heat treatment in a non-oxidizing atmosphere at a temperature of 550° C. or higher and 750° C. or lower to remove an organic constituent (resin foam) and sinter an aluminum powder.

However, in accordance with this method, a layer which forms a eutectic alloy of the above-mentioned metal and aluminum is produced and an aluminum layer of high purity cannot be formed.

As other methods, it is considered that a resin foam molded body having a three-dimensional network structure is subjected to aluminum plating. An electroplating process of aluminum itself is known, but since aluminum has high chemical affinity to oxygen and a lower electric potential than hydrogen, the electroplating in a plating bath containing an aqueous solution system is difficult. Thus, conventionally, aluminum electroplating has been studied in a plating bath containing a nonaqueous solution system. For example, as a technique for plating a metal surface with aluminum for the purpose of antioxidation of the metal surface, Patent Literature 3 discloses an aluminum electroplating method wherein a low melting composition, which is a blend melt of an onium halide and an aluminum halide, is used as a plating bath, and aluminum is deposited on a cathode while the water content of the plating bath is maintained at 2 mass % or less.

However, in the aluminum electroplating, plating of only a metal surface is possible, and there is no known method of electroplating on the surface of a resin molded body, in particular electroplating on the surface of a resin molded body having a three-dimensional network structure.

The present inventors have made earnest investigations concerning a method of electroplating the surface of a urethane resin molded body having a three-dimensional network structure with aluminum, and have found that it is possible to electroplate the surface of a urethane resin molded body by plating the urethane resin molded body, in which at least the surface is made electrically conductive, with aluminum in a molten salt bath. These findings have led to completion of a method for manufacturing an aluminum porous body. In accordance with this manufacturing method, an aluminum structure having a urethane resin molded body as the core of its skeleton can be obtained. For some applications such as various filters and catalyst supports, the aluminum structure may be used as a resin-metal composite as it is, but when the aluminum structure is used as a metal structure without a resin because of constraints resulting from the usage environment, an aluminum porous body needs to be formed by removing the resin.

Removal of the resin can be performed by any method, including decomposition (dissolution) with an organic solvent, a molten salt or supercritical water, decomposition by heating or the like.

Here, a method of decomposition by heating at high temperature or the like is convenient, but it involves oxidation of aluminum. Since aluminum is difficult to reduce after being oxidized once as distinct from nickel, if being used in, for example, an electrode material of a battery or the like, the electrode loses a conductive property due to oxidation, and therefore aluminum cannot be used as the electrode material. Thus, the present inventors have completed a method for manufacturing an aluminum porous body, in which an aluminum structure obtained by forming an aluminum layer on the surface of a porous resin molded body is heated to a temperature equal or below the melting point of aluminum in a state being dipped in a molten salt while applying a negative potential to the aluminum layer to remove the porous resin molded body through thermal decomposition to obtain an aluminum porous body, as a method of removing a resin without causing the oxidation of aluminum.

Incidentally, in order to use the aluminum porous body thus obtained as an electrode, it is necessary to attach a lead wire to the aluminum porous body to form a current collector, fill the aluminum porous body serving as the current collector with an active material, and subject the resulting aluminum porous body to treatments such as compressing and cutting by a process shown in FIG. 1, but a technology for practical use for industrially manufacturing electrodes for nonaqueous electrolyte batteries, and capacitors, lithium-ion capacitors and the like using a nonaqueous electrolytic solution from an aluminum porous body has not been yet known.

CITATION LIST Patent Literature

Patent Literature 1: Japanese Patent No. 3413662

Patent Literature 2: Japanese Unexamined Patent Publication No. 8-170126

Patent Literature 3: Japanese Patent No. 3202072

Patent Literature 4: Japanese Unexamined Patent Publication No. 56-86459

SUMMARY OF INVENTION Technical Problem

The present invention aims at providing a technology for practical use for industrially manufacturing an electrode from an aluminum porous body, and specifically, it is an object of the present invention to provide a three-dimensional network aluminum porous body in which the amount of aluminum forming a skeleton of the three-dimensional network aluminum porous body is uneven in the thickness direction, and a current collector and an electrode each using the aluminum porous body, and a manufacturing method thereof.

Solution to Problem

The constitution of the present invention is as follows.

(1) A three-dimensional network aluminum porous body, comprising a sheet-shaped three-dimensional network aluminum porous body for a current collector in which an amount of aluminum forming a skeleton of the three-dimensional network aluminum porous body is uneven in a thickness direction thereof.

(2) The three-dimensional network aluminum porous body according to (1), wherein when a cross section in the thickness direction of the three-dimensional network aluminum porous body is divided into three regions of a region 1, a region 2 and a region 3 in this order, an average of an amount of aluminum in the region 1 and an amount of aluminum in the region 3 differs from an amount of aluminum in the region 2.

(3) The three-dimensional network aluminum porous body according to (2), wherein a ratio of the average of the amount of aluminum in the region 1 and the amount of aluminum in the region 3 to the amount of aluminum in the region 2 is 1.1 or more.

(4) The three-dimensional network aluminum porous body according to (2), wherein a ratio of the average of the amount of aluminum in the region 1 and the amount of aluminum in the region 3 to the amount of aluminum in the region 2 is 0.9 or less.

(5) The three-dimensional network aluminum porous body according to (1), wherein when a cross section in the thickness direction of the three-dimensional network aluminum porous body is divided into two regions of a region 4 and a region 5, a ratio of an amount of aluminum in the region 4 to an amount of aluminum in the region 5 is 1.1 or more.

(6) The three-dimensional network aluminum porous body according to (1) formed by laminating three sheets of aluminum porous bodies A, B and C in this order in the thickness direction to be unified, wherein

a ratio of an average of a weight per unit area of the aluminum porous body A and a weight per unit area of the aluminum porous body C to a weight per unit area of the aluminum porous body B is 1.1 or more.

(7) The three-dimensional network aluminum porous body according to (1) formed by laminating three sheets of aluminum porous bodies D, E and F in this order in the thickness direction to be unified, wherein

a ratio of an average of a weight per unit area of the aluminum porous body D and a weight per unit area of the aluminum porous body F to a weight per unit area of the aluminum porous body E is 0.9 or less.

(8) The three-dimensional network aluminum porous body according to (1) formed by laminating two sheets of aluminum porous bodies G and H in this order in the thickness direction to be unified, wherein

a ratio of a weight per unit area of the aluminum porous body G to a weight per unit area of the aluminum porous body H is 1.1 or more.

(9) An electrode, comprising using the three-dimensional network aluminum porous body according to any one of (1) to (8).

(10) A nonaqueous electrolyte battery, comprising using the electrode according to (9).

(11) A capacitor using a nonaqueous electrolytic solution, comprising using the electrode according to (9).

(12) A lithium-ion capacitor using a nonaqueous electrolytic solution, comprising using the electrode according to (9).

Advantageous Effects of Invention

The three-dimensional network aluminum porous body of the present invention can be utilized for a process for producing an electrode material continuously and can reduce industrial production cost.

The three-dimensional network aluminum porous body of the present invention can improve the current collecting performance of a central portion in the thickness direction of an electrode and can improve the internal availability ratio of an active material when it is used as a base material of the electrode. Further, it can improve the holding performance of the active material and a battery life. Moreover, it can improve the windability of the electrode.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a view showing a process for manufacturing an electrode material from an aluminum porous body.

FIG. 2 is a schematic sectional view showing an aluminum porous body in which the amount of aluminum forming skeletons of outer surface portions (surface and rear side) is more than that of aluminum forming a skeleton of an inner portion (central portion).

FIG. 3 is a schematic sectional view showing an aluminum porous body in which the amount of aluminum forming a skeleton of an inner portion (central portion) is more than that of aluminum forming skeletons of outer surface portions (surface and rear side).

FIG. 4 is a schematic sectional view showing an aluminum porous body in which the amount of aluminum forming a skeleton of one half portion in the thickness direction is more than that of aluminum forming a skeleton of the other half portion in the thickness direction.

FIG. 5 is a schematic sectional view showing two kinds of aluminum porous bodies having different weight per unit area.

FIG. 6 is a flow chart showing a step of manufacturing an aluminum structure according to the present invention.

FIGS. 7A, 7B, 7C and 7D are schematic sectional views illustrating a step of manufacturing an aluminum structure according to the present invention.

FIG. 8 is an enlarged photograph of the surface of the structure of a urethane resin molded body.

FIG. 9 is a view illustrating an example of a step of continuous aluminum plating utilizing molten salt plating.

FIG. 10 is a view showing a step of compressing the end part of an aluminum porous body to form a compressed part.

FIG. 11 is a view showing a step of compressing the central part of an aluminum porous body to form a compressed part.

FIG. 12 is a view showing a step of filling a porous portion of an aluminum porous body with an active material slurry.

FIG. 13 is a schematic view showing an example of a structure in which an aluminum porous body is applied to a lithium battery.

FIG. 14 is a schematic view showing an example of a structure in which an aluminum porous body is applied to a capacitor using a nonaqueous electrolytic solution.

FIG. 15 is a schematic view showing an example of a structure in which an aluminum porous body is applied to a lithium-ion capacitor.

FIG. 16 is a schematic sectional view showing an example of a structure in which an aluminum porous body is applied to a molten salt battery.

DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS

The three-dimensional network aluminum porous body of the present invention is a sheet-shaped three-dimensional network aluminum porous body for a current collector, and has a feature that the amount of aluminum forming a skeleton of the three-dimensional network aluminum porous body is uneven in the thickness direction. Further, in the present invention, it is preferred that when a cross section in the thickness direction of the three-dimensional network aluminum porous body is divided into three regions of a region 1, a region 2 and a region 3 in this order, the average of the amounts of aluminum in the region 1 and the region 3 differs from the amount of aluminum in the region 2.

In the present invention, the amount of aluminum in each region in a cross section in the thickness direction of the aluminum porous body can be measured in the following manner.

First, a resin is filled into an opening of the three-dimensional network aluminum porous body. Examples of the resin to be filled include an epoxy resin, an acrylic resin, and a polyester resin. When the resin is solidified, a cross section of the resin is exposed by polishing, the cross section is observed with a microscope and a photograph of the cross section is taken. Subsequently, the photograph is divided into three regions in the thickness direction of the aluminum porous body, and these regions are defined as a region 1, a region 2 and a region 3 in order. Then, a sum of areas of the cross sections of aluminum (i.e., metal portions of a porous body skeleton) contained in the respective regions in the photograph is calculated by image processing. This measurement is performed five times at different cross sections and an average value thereof is calculated.

Since this average area value represents the amounts of aluminum in the respective regions, it is determined whether the amount of aluminum in each region is large or not based on this value.

As described above, the three-dimensional network aluminum porous body of the present invention has a feature in that the amount of aluminum forming a skeleton is uneven in the thickness direction, and as a three-dimensional network aluminum porous body having such a configuration, for example, the following aspects [1] to [3] are conceivable.

[1] An aspect in which as shown in FIG. 2, the amount of aluminum forming skeletons of the outer surface portions (surface and rear side) of a sheet-shaped aluminum porous body is increased and the amount of aluminum forming a skeleton of the inner portion (central portion) of a sheet-shaped aluminum porous body is decreased.

[2] An aspect in which as shown in FIG. 3, the amount of aluminum forming a skeleton of the inner portion (central portion) of a sheet-shaped aluminum porous body is increased and the amount of aluminum forming skeletons of the outer surface portions (surface and rear side) of a sheet-shaped aluminum porous body is decreased.

[3] An aspect in which as shown in FIG. 4, the amount of aluminum forming a skeleton of one half portion in the thickness direction of a sheet-shaped aluminum porous body is more than that of aluminum forming a skeleton of the other half portion of a sheet-shaped aluminum porous body.

Hereinafter, the specific contents and effect of constitutions of [1] to [3] described above will be described, respectively.

—Aspect of [1]—

An aluminum porous body has a feature that when the amount of aluminum forming a skeleton is large, it has a thick skeleton and excellent strength, and on the contrary, when the amount of aluminum forming a skeleton is small, it has a thin skeleton and low strength and tends to deform. Thus, as shown in FIG. 2, when the amount of aluminum forming skeletons of the outer surface portions (surface and rear side) of the sheet of a sheet-shaped aluminum porous body is increased and the amount of aluminum forming a skeleton of the inner portion (central portion) of the sheet is decreased, the inner portion tends to be crushed if a load is applied in the thickness direction of the sheet.

When such a three-dimensional network aluminum porous body is used as a base material of an electrode for nonaqueous electrolyte batteries (lithium battery, etc.), and a capacitor and a lithium-ion capacitor each using a nonaqueous electrolytic solution, the central portion of the aluminum porous body is preferentially compressed by a compressing step denoted by F in FIG. 1 to increase the metal density of the central portion, and therefore it can achieve the effect of improving the current collecting performance of the central portion in the thickness direction of the electrode and output characteristics. Further, the internal availability ratio of an active material of the aluminum porous body is improved.

Therefore, in the three-dimensional network aluminum porous body of the present invention, it is preferred that a ratio of the average of the amounts of aluminum in the region 1 and the region 3 to the amount of aluminum in the region 2 is 1.1 or more, and more preferably 1.5 or more. When the ratio of the average of the amount of aluminum in the region 1 to the amount of aluminum in the region 2 is less than 1.1, the effects of improvement in the current collecting performance of the central portion in the thickness direction and improvement in the availability ratio of an active material are hardly achieved.

The ratio of the amount of aluminum can be determined by calculating the area values of aluminum in the respective regions and calculating a ratio of one area value to another area value, as with the amounts of aluminum in the respective regions. That is, an average of the area value of aluminum in the region 1 and the area value of aluminum in the region 3 may be calculated, and the average may be divided by the area value of aluminum in the region 2.

In order to prepare the aluminum porous body in which the ratio of the average of the amounts of aluminum in the region 1 and the region 3 to the amount of aluminum in the region 2 is 1.1 or more as described above, in the step of manufacturing the aluminum porous body described later, the surface portion in the thickness direction of the sheet-shaped resin molded body may be plated with more aluminum than the central portion in the thickness direction in subjecting the resin molded body to molten salt plating of aluminum. Specifically, for example, in the molten salt plating of aluminum, when a resin molded body provided with a conductive property is used as a cathode, a smaller distance between electrodes is employed, and plating is performed under the condition of a high current density, more aluminum can be deposited on the portion to become the region 1 or 3.

Further, it is also possible to achieve a similar effect by laminating aluminum porous bodies having different weights per unit area. That is, the three-dimensional network aluminum porous body of the present invention is preferably a three-dimensional network aluminum porous body formed by laminating three sheets of aluminum porous bodies A, B and C in this order in the thickness direction to be unified, and a ratio of the average of the weights per unit area of the aluminum porous body A and the aluminum porous body C to the weight per unit area of the aluminum porous body B is preferably 1.1 or more.

Specifically, as shown in FIG. 5, two kinds of aluminum porous bodies, an aluminum porous body including a large amount of weight per unit area and an aluminum porous body including a small amount of weight per unit area, are prepared. Then, two sheets of the aluminum porous bodies A and C including a large amount of weight per unit area, and the aluminum porous body B including a small amount of weight per unit area are laminated with the aluminum porous body B sandwiched between the aluminum porous bodies A and C to be unified. Thereby, a three-dimensional network aluminum porous body, in which the amount of aluminum forming skeletons of the outer surface layer portions (surface and rear side) is large and on the contrary, the amount of aluminum forming a skeleton of the inner portion (central layer portion) is small, can be prepared. Further, the thickness of the three-dimensional network aluminum porous body can be larger than those of conventional three-dimensional network aluminum porous bodies by laminating a plurality of aluminum porous bodies to unify them.

Further, when the aluminum porous bodies A, B and C are selected so that the ratio of the average of the weights per unit area of the aluminum porous body A and the aluminum porous body C to the weight per unit area of the aluminum porous body B is 1.1 or more, as described above, the current collecting performance of the central portion in the thickness direction of the obtained aluminum porous body can be improved and further the availability ratio of an active material can be improved. Moreover, the ratio of the average of the weights per unit area of the aluminum porous body A and the aluminum porous body C to the weight per unit area of the aluminum porous body B is more preferably 1.1 or more.

In addition, a technique of unifying the laminated aluminum porous bodies A to C is not particularly limited, and, for example, by raising the temperature of the sheet of the laminated aluminum porous bodies up to around the melting point of aluminum in a state of applying pressure to the sheet of the laminated aluminum porous bodies, skeletons in contact with each other can be fused with each other to be unified.

—Aspect of [2]—

As shown in FIG. 3, when the amount of aluminum forming skeletons of the outer surface portions (surface and rear side) of the sheet of a sheet-shaped aluminum porous body is decreased and the amount of aluminum forming a skeleton of the inner portion (central portion) of the sheet is increased, the outer surface portion tends to be crushed if a load is applied in the thickness direction of the sheet.

When such a three-dimensional network aluminum porous body is used as a base material of an electrode for nonaqueous electrolyte batteries (lithium battery, etc.), and a capacitor and a lithium-ion capacitor each using a nonaqueous electrolytic solution, it can achieve the effect of improving the holding performance of an active material since the outer surface portions of the aluminum porous body are preferentially compressed by a compressing step denoted by F in FIG. 1. That is, since exfoliation of an active material is prevented, a battery life is improved and output characteristics are improved.

Therefore, in the aluminum porous body of the present invention, it is preferred that the ratio of the average of the amounts of aluminum in the region 1 and the region 3 to the amount of aluminum in the region 2 is 0.9 or less, and more preferably 0.7 or less. When the ratio of the average of the amount of aluminum in the region 1 to the amount of aluminum in the region 2 is more than 0.9, the effect of improvement in the holding performance of an active material, described above, is hardly achieved.

The ratio of the amount of aluminum can be determined by calculating the area values of aluminum in the respective regions and calculating a ratio of one area value to another area value, as with the above-mentioned case. That is, an average of the area value of aluminum in the region 1 and the area value of aluminum in the region 3 may be calculated, and the average may be divided by the area value of aluminum in the region 2.

In order to prepare the aluminum porous body in which the ratio of the average of the amounts of aluminum in the region 1 and the region 3 to the amount of aluminum in the region 2 is 0.9 or less as described above, in the step of manufacturing the aluminum porous body described later, the central portion in the thickness direction of the sheet-shaped resin molded body may be plated with more aluminum than the surface portion in the thickness direction in subjecting the resin molded body to molten salt plating of aluminum. Specifically, for example, in the molten salt plating of aluminum, first, a resin molded body provided with a conductive property is used as a cathode, a larger distance between electrodes is employed, and plating is performed under the condition of a low current density to prepare a resin molded body in which the amounts of aluminum in the portions to respectively become the regions 1 to 3 are uniform. Next, by using the resin molded body as an anode, employing a smaller distance between electrodes, and dissolving only a small amount of aluminum under the condition of a high current density, more aluminum in the portion to become the region 1 or 3 is dissolved than aluminum in the portion to become the region 2, and as a result, an aluminum porous body, in which the amount of aluminum in the portion to become the region 2 is large, can be prepared.

Further, as with the case described above, it is also effective to laminate aluminum porous bodies having different weights per unit area. That is, the three-dimensional network aluminum porous body of the present invention is preferably a three-dimensional network aluminum porous body formed by laminating three sheets of aluminum porous bodies D, E and F in this order in the thickness direction to be unified, and a ratio of the average of the weights per unit area of the aluminum porous body D and the aluminum porous body F to the weight per unit area of the aluminum porous body E is preferably 0.9 or less.

In this case, two sheets of the aluminum porous bodies D and F including a small amount of weight per unit area, and the aluminum porous body E including a large amount of weight per unit area are laminated with the aluminum porous body E sandwiched between the aluminum porous bodies D and F to be unified. Thereby, a three-dimensional network aluminum porous body, in which the amount of aluminum forming skeletons of the outer surface layer portions (surface and rear side) is small and on the contrary, the amount of aluminum forming a skeleton of the inner portion (central layer portion) is large, can be prepared. Further, the thickness of the three-dimensional network aluminum porous body can be larger than those of conventional three-dimensional network aluminum porous bodies by laminating a plurality of aluminum porous bodies to unify them.

When the aluminum porous bodies D to F are selected so that the ratio of the average of the weights per unit area of the aluminum porous body D and the aluminum porous body F to the weight per unit area of the aluminum porous body E is 0.9 or less, as described above, the holding performance of an active material in the obtained aluminum porous body can be improved. Moreover, the ratio of the average of the weights per unit area of the aluminum porous body D and the aluminum porous body F to the weight per unit area of the aluminum porous body E is more preferably 0.7 or less.

In addition, a technique of unifying the laminated aluminum porous bodies A to C is not particularly limited, and, for example, by raising the temperature of the sheet of the laminated aluminum porous bodies up to around the melting point of aluminum in a state of applying pressure to the sheet of the laminated aluminum porous bodies, skeletons in contact with each other can be fused with each other to be unified.

—Aspect of [3]—

If a sheet-shaped aluminum porous body is formed into a cylindrical aluminum porous body by bend-working, a force, by which a neighborhood of a surface portion to become an outer side of the cylinder is pull and on the contrary a neighborhood of a surface portion to become an inner side is compressed, is applied in bending the porous body. Accordingly, an aluminum porous body shown in FIG. 4, in which the amount of aluminum in the portion to become an outer side in bending the porous body is adjusted to high and the amount of aluminum in the portion to become an inner side is adjusted to low, is used, it is preferred since the amount of aluminum in the outer portion of the cylinder and the amount of aluminum in the inner portion are uniform after bend-working. When such an aluminum porous body is used, since bend-working is easily performed, the windability of the electrode is improved.

In the three-dimensional network aluminum porous body of the present invention, it is preferred that when a cross section in the thickness direction of the three-dimensional network aluminum porous body is divided into two regions of a region 4 and a region 5, a ratio of the amount of aluminum in the region 4 to the amount of aluminum in the region 5 is 1.1 or more, and more preferably 1.5 or more. When the ratio of the amount of aluminum in the region 4 to the amount of aluminum in the region 5 is less than 1.1, the effect that the amount of aluminum is uniform after bend-working, as described above, is hardly achieved.

In order to prepare the aluminum porous body in which the ratio of the amount of aluminum in the region 5 to the amount of aluminum in the region 4 is 1.1 or more as described above, in the step of manufacturing the aluminum porous body described later, one half portion in the thickness direction of the sheet-shaped resin molded body may be plated with more aluminum in subjecting the resin molded body to molten salt plating of aluminum. Specifically, for example, in the molten salt plating of aluminum, by using a resin molded body provided with a conductive property as a cathode, employing a smaller distance between electrodes on the side to become the region 4 and employing a larger distance between electrodes on the side to become the region 5, more aluminum is deposited in the portion to become the region 4, and therefore an aluminum porous body, in which the amount of aluminum in one half portion in the thickness direction is large, can be prepared.

Further, as with the case described above, it is also effective to laminate aluminum porous bodies having different weights per unit area. That is, the three-dimensional network aluminum porous body of the present invention is preferably a three-dimensional network aluminum porous body formed by laminating two sheets of aluminum porous bodies G and H in this order in the thickness direction to be unified, and a ratio of the weight per unit area of the aluminum porous body G to the weight per unit area of the aluminum porous body H is preferably or more.

By laminating the aluminum porous body H including a small amount of weight per unit area and the aluminum porous body G including a large amount of weight per unit area to unifying them, a three-dimensional network aluminum porous body, in which the amount of aluminum forming a skeleton of the aluminum porous body varies in the thickness direction, can be prepared. Further, the thickness of the three-dimensional network aluminum porous body can be larger than those of conventional three-dimensional network aluminum porous bodies by laminating a plurality of aluminum porous bodies to unify them.

When the aluminum porous bodies G and H are selected so that the ratio of the weight per unit area of the aluminum porous body G to the weight per unit area of the aluminum porous body H is 1.1 or more, as described above, an aluminum porous body having excellent bending workability can be obtained. The ratio of the weight per unit area of the aluminum porous body G to the weight per unit area of the aluminum porous body H is more preferably 1.5 or more.

Hereinafter, a method for manufacturing the three-dimensional network aluminum porous body of the present invention will be described. Hereinafter, the manufacturing method will be described with reference to the drawings if necessary, taking an example in which an aluminum plating method is applied as a method of forming an aluminum film on the surface of a urethane resin molded body for a representative example. Throughout the reference figures hereinafter, the parts assigned the same number are the same parts or the corresponding parts. The present invention is not limited thereto but is defined by the claims, and all modifications which fall within the scope of the claims and the equivalents thereof are intended to be embraced by the claims.

(Step of Manufacturing Aluminum Structure)

FIG. 6 is a flow chart showing a step of manufacturing an aluminum structure. FIGS. 7A to 7D show schematic views of the formation of an aluminum plating film using a resin molded body as a core material corresponding to the flow chart. The overall flow of the manufacturing step will be described with reference to both figures. First, preparation 101 of a resin molded body serving as a base material is performed. FIG. 7A is an enlarged schematic view of the surface of a resin molded body having continuous pores as an example of a resin molded body serving as a base material. Pores are formed in the skeleton of a resin molded body 1. Next, a conductive treatment 102 of the surface of the resin molded body is performed. As illustrated in FIG. 7B, through this step, a thin conductive layer 2 made of an electric conductor is formed on the surface of the resin molded body 1.

Subsequently, aluminum plating 103 in a molten salt is performed to form an aluminum plated layer 3 on the surface of the conductive layer of the resin molded body (FIG. 7C). Thereby, an aluminum structure is obtained in which the aluminum plated layer 3 is formed on the surface of the resin molded body serving as a base material. Removal 104 of the resin molded body serving as the base material is performed.

The resin molded body 1 can be removed by decomposition or the like to obtain an aluminum structure (porous body) containing only a remaining metal layer (FIG. 7D). Hereinafter, each of these steps will be described in turn.

(Preparation of Porous Resin Molded Body)

A porous resin molded body having a three-dimensional network structure and continuous pores is prepared. A material of the porous resin molded body may be any resin. As the material, a resin foam molded body made of polyurethane, melamine, polypropylene or polyethylene can be exemplified. Though the resin foam molded body has been exemplified, a resin molded body having any shape may be selected as long as the resin molded body has continuously-formed pores (continuous pores). For example, a resin molded body having a shape like a nonwoven fabric formed by tangling fibrous resin can be used in place of the resin foam molded body. The resin foam molded body preferably has a porosity of 80% to 98% and a pore diameter of 50 μm to 500 μm. Urethane foams and melamine foams have a high porosity, continuity of pores, and excellent thermal decomposition properties and therefore they can be preferably used as the resin foam molded body.

Urethane foams are preferred in points of uniformity of pores, easiness of availability and the like, and preferred in that urethane foams with a small pore diameter can be available.

Porous resin molded bodies often contain residue materials such as a foaming agent and an unreacted monomer in the manufacture of the foam, and are therefore preferably subjected to a washing treatment for the sake of the subsequent steps. As an example of the porous resin molded body, a urethane foam subjected to a washing treatment as a preliminary treatment is shown in FIG. 8. In the resin molded body, a three-dimensional network is configured as a skeleton, and therefore continuous pores are configured as a whole. The skeleton of the urethane foam has an almost triangular shape in a cross-section perpendicular to its extending direction. Herein, the porosity is defined by the following equation:

Porosity=(1−(weight of porous material [g]/(volume of porous material [cm³]×material density)))×100 [%]

Further, the pore diameter is determined by magnifying the surface of the resin molded body in a photomicrograph or the like, counting the number of pores per inch (25.4 mm) as the number of cells, and calculating an average pore diameter by the following equation: average pore diameter=25.4 mm/the number of cells.

(Conductive Treatment of Surface of Resin Molded Body)

In order to perform electroplating, the surface of the resin foam is previously subjected to a conductive treatment. A method of the conductive treatment is not particularly limited as long as it is a treatment by which a layer having a conductive property can be disposed on the surface of the resin molded body, and any method, including electroless plating of a conductive metal such as nickel, vapor deposition and sputtering of aluminum or the like, and application of a conductive coating material containing conductive particles such as carbon, may be selected.

(Formation of Aluminum Layer: Molten Salt Plating)

Next, an aluminum-plated layer is formed on the surface of the resin molded body by electroplating in a molten salt. By plating aluminum in the molten salt bath, a thick aluminum layer can be uniformly formed particularly on the surface of a complicated skeleton structure like the resin molded body having a three-dimensional network structure. A direct current is applied between a cathode of the resin molded body having a surface subjected to the conductive treatment and an anode of an aluminum plate with a purity of 99.0% in the molten salt. As the molten salt, an organic molten salt which is an eutectic salt of an organic halide and an aluminum halide or an inorganic molten salt which is an eutectic salt of an alkaline metal halide and an aluminum halide may be used. Use of an organic molten salt bath which melts at a relatively low temperature is preferred because it allows plating without the decomposition of the resin molded body, a base material. As the organic halide, an imidazolium salt, a pyridinium salt or the like may be used, and specifically, 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium chloride (EMIC) and butylpyridinium chloride (BPC) are preferred. Since the contamination of the molten salt with water or oxygen causes degradation of the molten salt, plating is preferably performed in an atmosphere of an inert gas, such as nitrogen or argon, and in a sealed environment.

The molten salt bath is preferably a molten salt bath containing nitrogen, and particularly an imidazolium salt bath is preferably used. In the case where a salt which melts at a high temperature is used as the molten salt, the dissolution or decomposition of the resin in the molten salt is faster than the growth of a plated layer, and therefore, a plated layer cannot be formed on the surface of the resin molded body. The imidazolium salt bath can be used without having any affect on the resin even at relatively low temperatures. As the imidazolium salt, a salt which contains an imidazolium cation having alkyl groups at 1,3-position is preferably used, and particularly, aluminum chloride+1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium chloride (AlCl₃+EMIC)-based molten salts are most preferably used because of their high stability and resistance to decomposition. The imidazolium salt bath allows plating of urethane foam resins and melamine foam resins, and the temperature of the molten salt bath ranges from 10° C. to 65° C., and preferably 25° C. to 60° C. With a decrease in temperature, the current density range where plating is possible is narrowed, and plating of the entire surface of a porous resin molded body becomes difficult. The failure that a shape of a base resin is impaired tends to occur at a high temperature higher than 65° C.

With respect to molten salt aluminum plating on a metal surface, it is reported that an additive, such as xylene, benzene, toluene or 1,10-phenanthroline, is added to AlCl₃-EMIC for the purpose of improving the smoothness of the plated surface. The present inventors have found that particularly in aluminum plating of a porous resin molded body having a three-dimensional network structure, the addition of 1,10-phenanthroline has characteristic effects on the formation of an aluminum porous body. That is, it provides a first characteristic that the smoothness of a plating film is improved and the aluminum skeleton forming the porous body is hardly broken, and a second characteristic that uniform plating can be achieved with a small difference in plating thickness between the surface and the interior of the porous body.

In the case of pressing the completed aluminum porous body or the like, the above-mentioned two characteristics of the hard-to-break skeleton and the uniform plating thickness in the interior and exterior can provide a porous body which has a hard-to-break skeleton as a whole and is uniformly pressed. When the aluminum porous body is used as an electrode material for batteries or the like, it is performed that an electrode is filled with an electrode active material and is pressed to increase its density. However, since the skeleton is often broken in the step of filling the active material or pressing, the two characteristics are extremely effective in such an application.

According to the above description, the addition of an organic solvent to the molten salt bath is preferred, and particularly 1,10-phenanthroline is preferably used. The amount of the organic solvent added to the plating bath preferably ranges from 0.2 to 7 g/L. When the amount is 0.2 g/L or less, the resulting plating is poor in smoothness and brittle, and it is difficult to achieve an effect of decreasing a difference in thickness between the surface layer and the interior. When the amount is 7 g/L or more, plating efficiency is decreased and it is difficult to achieve a predetermined plating thickness.

FIG. 9 is a view schematically showing the configuration of an apparatus for continuously plating the above-mentioned strip-shaped resin with aluminum. This view shows a configuration in which a strip-shaped resin 22 having a surface subjected to a conductive treatment is transferred from the left to the right in the figure. A first plating bath 21 a is configured by a cylindrical electrode 24, an aluminum anode 25 disposed on the inner wall of a container, and a plating bath 23. The strip-shaped resin 22 passes through the plating bath 23 along the cylindrical electrode 24, and thereby a uniform electric current can easily flow through the entire resin molded body, and uniform plating can be achieved. A plating bath 21 b is a bath for further performing thick uniform plating and is configured by a plurality of baths so that plating can be performed multiple times. The strip-shaped resin 22 having a surface subjected to a conductive treatment passes through a plating bath 28 while being transferred by electrode rollers 26, which function as feed rollers and power feeding cathodes on the outside of the bath, to thereby perform plating. The plurality of baths include anodes 27 made of aluminum facing both faces of the resin molded body via the plating bath 28, which allow more uniform plating on both faces of the resin molded body. A plating liquid is adequately removed from the plated aluminum porous body by nitrogen gas blowing and then the aluminum porous body can be washed with water to obtain an aluminum porous body.

On the other hand, an inorganic salt bath can also be used as a molten salt to an extent to which a resin is not melted or the like. The inorganic salt bath is a salt of a two-component system, typically AlCl₃—XCl (X: alkali metal), or a multi-component system. Such an inorganic salt bath usually has a higher molten temperature than that in an organic salt bath like an imidazolium salt bath, but it has less environmental constraints such as water content or oxygen and can be put to practical use at a low cost as a whole. When the resin is a melamine foam resin, an inorganic salt bath at 60° C. to 150° C. is employed because the resin can be used at a higher temperature than a urethane foam resin.

An aluminum structure having a resin molded body as the core of its skeleton is obtained through the above-mentioned steps. For some applications such as various filters and a catalyst support, the aluminum structure may be used as a resin-metal composite as it is, but when the aluminum structure is used as a metal porous body without a resin because of constraints resulting from the usage environment, the resin is removed. In the present invention, in order to avoid causing the oxidation of aluminum, the resin is removed through decomposition in a molten salt described below.

(Removal of Resin: Treatment by Molten Salt)

The decomposition in a molten salt is performed in the following manner. A resin molded body having an aluminum plated layer formed on the surface thereof is dipped in a molten salt, and is heated while applying a negative potential (potential lower than a standard electrode potential of aluminum) to the aluminum layer to remove the resin foam molded body. When the negative potential is applied to the aluminum layer with the resin foam molded body dipped in the molten salt, the resin foam molded body can be decomposed without oxidizing aluminum. A heating temperature can be appropriately selected in accordance with the type of the resin foam molded body. When the resin molded body is urethane, a temperature of the molten salt bath needs to be 380° C. or higher since decomposition of urethane occurs at about 380° C., but the treatment needs to be performed at a temperature equal to lower than the melting point (660° C.) of aluminum in order to avoid melting aluminum. A preferred temperature range is 500° C. or higher and 600° C. or lower. A negative potential to be applied is on the minus side of the reduction potential of aluminum and on the plus side of the reduction potential of the cation in the molten salt. In this manner, an aluminum porous body which has continuous pores, and has a thin oxide layer on the surface and a low oxygen content can be obtained.

The molten salt used in the decomposition of the resin may be a halide salt of an alkali metal or alkaline earth metal such that the aluminum electrode potential is lower. More specifically, the molten salt preferably contains one or more salts selected from the group consisting of lithium chloride (LiCl), potassium chloride (KCl), and sodium chloride (NaCl). In this manner, an aluminum porous body which has continuous pores, and has a thin oxide layer on the surface and a low oxygen content can be obtained.

Next, a process for manufacturing an electrode from the aluminum porous body thus obtained will be described.

FIG. 1 is a view illustrating an example of a process for continuously manufacturing an electrode from an aluminum porous body. The process includes a porous body sheet winding off step A of winding off a porous body sheet from a winding off roller 41, a thickness adjustment step B using a compressing roller 42, a lead welding step C using a compressing-welding roller 43 and a lead welding roller 49, a slurry filling step D using a filling roller 44, a slurry supply nozzle 50 and a slurry 51, a drying step E using a drying machine 45, a compressing step F using a compressing roller 46, a cutting step G using a cutting roller 47, and a wind-up step H using a wind-up roller 48. Hereinafter, these steps will be described specifically.

(Thickness Adjustment Step)

An aluminum porous body sheet is wound off from a raw sheet roll around which the sheet of an aluminum porous body has been wound and is adjusted so as to have an optimum thickness and a flat surface by roller pressing in the thickness adjustment step. The final thickness of the aluminum porous body is appropriately determined in accordance with an application of an electrode, and this thickness adjustment step is a precompressing step of a compressing step for achieving the final thickness and compresses the aluminum porous body to a level of thickness at which a treatment in the following step is easily performed. A flat-plate press or a roller press is used as a pressing machine. The flat-plate press is preferable for suppressing the elongation of a current collector, but is not suitable for mass production, and therefore, roller press capable of continuous treatment is preferably used.

(Lead Welding Step) —Compression of End Part of Aluminum Porous Body—

When the aluminum porous body is used as an electrode current collector of a secondary battery or the like, a tab lead for external extraction needs to be welded to the aluminum porous body. In the case of an electrode using the aluminum porous body, since a robust metal part is not present in the aluminum porous body, it is impossible to weld a lead piece directly to the aluminum porous body. Therefore, an end part of the aluminum porous body is processed into the form of foil by compressing to impart mechanical strength thereto, and a tab lead is welded to the part.

An example of a method of processing the end part of the aluminum porous body will be described.

FIG. 10 is a view schematically showing the compressing step.

A rotating roller can be used as a compressing jig.

When the compressed part has a thickness of 0.05 mm or more and 0.2 mm or less (for example, about 0.1 mm), predetermined mechanical strength can be achieved.

In FIG. 11, the central part of an aluminum porous body 34 having the width of two aluminum porous bodies is compressed by a rotating roller 35 as a compressing jig to form a compressed part (lead part) 33. After compression, the compressed part 33 is cut along the center line of the central part to obtain two sheets of electrode current collectors having a compressed part at the end of the current collector.

Further, a plurality of current collectors can be obtained by forming a plurality of strip-shaped compressed parts at the central part of the aluminum porous body by using a plurality of rotating rollers, and cutting along the respective center lines of these strip-shaped compressed parts.

—Bonding of Tab Lead to Peripheral Portion of Electrode—

A tab lead is bonded to the compressed part of the end part of the current collector thus obtained. It is preferred that a metal foil is used as a tab lead in order to reduce electric resistance of an electrode and the metal foil is bonded to the surface of at least one side of peripheries of the electrode. Further, in order to reduce electric resistance, welding is preferably employed as a bonding method. A width for welding a metal foil is preferably 10 mm or less since a too wide metal foil causes wasted space to increase in a battery and a capacity density of the battery is decreased. When the width for welding is too narrow, since welding becomes difficult and the effect of collecting a current is deteriorated, the width is preferably 1 mm or more.

As a method of welding, a method of resistance welding or ultrasonic welding can be used, but the ultrasonic welding is preferred because of its larger bonding area.

—Metal Foil—

A material of the metal foil is preferably aluminum in consideration of electric resistance and tolerance for an electrolytic solution. Further, since impurities in the metal foil causes the elution or reaction of the impurities in a battery, a capacitor or a lithium-ion capacitor, an aluminum foil having a purity of 99.99% or more is preferably used. The thickness of the welded part is preferably smaller than that of the electrode itself.

The aluminum foil is preferably made to have a thickness of 20 to 500 μm.

Welding of the metal foil may be performed before filling the current collector with an active material, or may be performed after the filling, but when the welding is performed before filling, the active material can be prevented from exfoliating. Particularly, in the case of ultrasonic welding, welding is preferably performed before filling. Moreover, an activated carbon paste may adhere to a welded portion, but since there is a possibility that the paste can be peeled off during the step, the welded portion is preferably masked in order to avoid filling the paste.

In addition, though in the above description, the compressing step of the end part and the bonding step of the tab lead have been described as separate steps, the compressing step and the bonding step may be performed simultaneously. In this case, a roller, in which a roller part to be brought into contact, as a compressing roller, with an end part for bonding a tab lead of the aluminum porous body sheet can perform resistance welding, is used, and the aluminum porous body sheet and the metal foil can be simultaneously supplied to the roller to perform compressing of the end part and metal foil welding to the compressed part simultaneously.

(Step of Filling Active Material)

An electrode is obtained by filling the current collector prepared as described above with an active material. The active material is appropriately selected in accordance with the purpose of use of the electrode.

For filling the active material, publicly known methods such as a method of filling by immersion and a coating method can be employed. Examples of the coating method include a roll coating method, an applicator coating method, an electrostatic coating method, a powder coating method, a spray coating method, a spray coater coating method, a bar coater coating method, a roll coater coating method, a dip coater coating method, a doctor blade coating method, a wire bar coating method, a knife coater coating method, a blade coating method, and a screen printing method.

When the active material is filled, a conduction aid or a binder is added as required, and an organic solvent is mixed therewith to prepare a slurry, and the prepared slurry is filled into the aluminum porous body by using the above-mentioned filling method.

FIG. 12 shows a method of filling a porous body with a slurry by a roll coating process. As shown in the figure, the slurry is supplied onto a porous body sheet and this sheet is passed between a pair of rotating rollers opposed to each other at a predetermined interval. The slurry is pressed and filled into the porous body when passing between the rotating rollers.

(Drying Step)

The porous body filled with the active material is transferred to a drying machine and heated to evaporate/remove the organic solvent and thereby an electrode material having the active material fixed in the porous body is obtained.

(Compressing Step)

The dried electrode material is compressed to a final thickness in the compressing step. A flat-plate press or a roller press is used as a pressing machine. The flat-plate press is preferable for suppressing the elongation of a current collector, but is not suitable for mass production, and therefore roller press capable of continuous treatment is preferably used.

A case of compressing by roller pressing is shown in the compressing step F of FIG. 1.

(Cutting Step)

In order to improve the ability of mass production of the electrode material, it is preferred that the width of a sheet of the aluminum porous body is set to the width of a plurality of final products and the sheet is cut along its traveling direction with a plurality of blades to form a plurality of long sheets of electrode materials. This cutting step is a step of dividing a long length of electrode material into a plurality of long lengths of electrode materials.

(Winding-Up Step)

This step is a step of winding up the plurality of long sheets of electrode materials obtained in the above-mentioned cutting step around a wind-up roller.

Next, applications of the electrode material obtained in the above-mentioned step will be described.

Examples of main applications of the electrode material in which the aluminum porous body is used as a current collector include electrodes for nonaqueous electrolyte batteries such as a lithium battery and a molten salt battery, and electrodes for a capacitor and a lithium ion capacitor each using a nonaqueous electrolytic solution.

Hereinafter, these applications will be described.

(Lithium Battery)

Next, an electrode material for batteries using an aluminum porous body and a battery will be described below. For example, when an aluminum porous body is used in a positive electrode of a lithium battery (including a lithium-ion secondary battery), lithium cobalt oxide (LiCoO₂), lithium manganese oxide (LiMn₂O₄), lithium nickel dioxide (LiNiO₂) or the like is used as an active material. The active material is used in combination with a conduction aid and a binder.

In a conventional positive electrode material for lithium batteries, an electrode formed by applying an active material to the surface of an aluminum foil is used. Though a lithium battery has a higher capacity than a nickel hydride battery or a capacitor, a further increase in capacity is required in automobile applications. Therefore, in order to increase a battery capacity per unit area, the application thickness of the active material is increased. Further, in order to effectively utilize the active material, the active material needs to be in electrical contact with the aluminum foil, a current collector, and therefore, the active material is mixed with a conduction aid to be used.

In contrast, the aluminum porous body according to the present invention has a high porosity and a large surface area per unit area. Thus, a contact area between the current collector and the active material is increased, and therefore, the active material can be effectively utilized, the battery capacity can be improved, and the amount of the conduction aid to be mixed can be decreased. In a lithium battery, the above-mentioned positive electrode materials are used for a positive electrode, and for a negative electrode, a foil, a punched metal or a porous body of copper or nickel is used as a current collector and a negative electrode active material such as graphite, lithium titanium oxide (Li₄Ti₅O₁₂), an alloy of Sn or Si, lithium metal or the like is used. The negative electrode active material is also used in combination with a conduction aid and a binder.

Such a lithium battery can have an increased capacity even with a small electrode area and accordingly have a higher energy density than a conventional lithium battery using an aluminum foil. The effects of the present invention in a secondary battery have been mainly described above, but the effects of the present invention in a primary battery is the same as that in the secondary battery, and a contact area is increased when the aluminum porous body is filled with the active material and a capacity of the primary battery can be improved.

(Configuration of Lithium Battery)

An electrolyte used in a lithium battery includes a nonaqueous electrolytic solution and a solid electrolyte.

FIG. 13 is a vertical sectional view of a solid-state lithium battery using a solid electrolyte. A solid-state lithium battery 60 includes a positive electrode 61, a negative electrode 62, and a solid electrolyte layer (SE layer) 63 disposed between both electrodes. The positive electrode 61 includes a positive electrode layer (positive electrode body) 64 and a current collector 65 of positive electrode, and the negative electrode 62 includes a negative electrode layer 66 and a current collector 67 of negative electrode.

As the electrolyte, a nonaqueous electrolytic solution described later is used besides the solid electrolyte. In this case, a separator (porous polymer film, nonwoven fabric or paper) is disposed between both electrodes, and both electrodes and separator are impregnated with the nonaqueous electrolytic solution.

(Active Material Filled into Aluminum Porous Body)

When an aluminum porous body is used in a positive electrode of a lithium battery, a material that can extract/insert lithium can be used as an active material, and an aluminum porous body filled with such a material can provide an electrode suitable for a lithium secondary battery. As the material of the positive electrode active material, for example, lithium cobalt oxide (LiCoO₂), lithium nickel dioxide (LiNiO₂), lithium cobalt nickel oxide (LiCo_(0.3)Ni_(0.7)O₂), lithium manganese oxide (LiMn₂O₄), lithium titanium oxide (Li₄Ti₅O₁₂), lithium manganese oxide compound (LiM_(y)Mn2-yO₄); M=Cr, Co, Ni) or lithium acid is used. The active material is used in combination with a conduction aid and a binder. Examples of the material of the positive electrode active material include transition metal oxides such as conventional lithium iron phosphate and olivine compounds which are compounds (LiFePO₄, LiFe_(0.5)Mn_(0.5)PO₄) of the lithium iron phosphate. Further, the transition metal elements contained in these materials may be partially substituted with another transition metal element.

Moreover, examples of other positive electrode active material include lithium metals in which the skeleton is a sulfide-based chalcogenide such as TiS₂, V₂S₃, FeS, FeS₂ or LiMS_(x) (M is a transition metal element such as Mo, Ti, Cu, Ni, or Fe, or Sb, Sn or Pb), or a metal oxide such as TiO₂, Cr₃O₈, V₂O₅ or MnO₂. Herein, the above-mentioned lithium titanate (Li₄Ti₅O₁₂) can also be used as a negative electrode active material.

(Electrolytic Solution Used in Lithium Battery)

A nonaqueous electrolytic solution is used in a polar aprotic organic solvent, and specific examples of the nonaqueous electrolytic solution include ethylene carbonate, diethyl carbonate, dimethyl carbonate, propylene carbonate, γ-butyrolactone and sulfolane. As a supporting salt, lithium tetrafluoroborate, lithium hexafluoroborate, an imide salt or the like is used. The concentration of the supporting salt serving as an electrolyte is preferably higher, but a supporting salt having a concentration of about 1 mol/L is generally used since there is a limit of dissolution.

(Solid Electrolyte Filled into Aluminum Porous Body)

The aluminum porous body may be additionally filled with a solid electrolyte besides the active material. The aluminum porous body can be suitable for an electrode of a solid-state lithium battery by filling the aluminum porous body with the active material and the solid electrolyte. However, the ratio of the active material to materials filled into the aluminum porous body is preferably adjusted to 50 mass % or more and more preferably 70 mass % or more from the viewpoint of ensuring a discharge capacity.

A sulfide-based solid electrolyte having high lithium ion conductivity is preferably used for the solid electrolyte, and examples of the sulfide-based solid electrolyte include sulfide-based solid electrolytes containing lithium, phosphorus and sulfur. The sulfide-based solid electrolyte may further contain an element such as O, Al, B, Si or Ge.

Such a sulfide-based solid electrolyte can be obtained by a publicly known method. Examples of a method of forming the sulfide-based solid electrolyte include a method in which lithium sulfide (Li₂S) and diphosphorus pentasulfide (P₂S₅) are prepared as starting materials, Li₂S and P₂S₅ are mixed in proportions of about 50:50 to about 80:20 in terms of mole ratio, and the resulting mixture is fused and quenched (melting and rapid quenching method) and a method of mechanically milling the quenched product (mechanical milling method).

The sulfide-based solid electrolyte obtained by the above-mentioned method is amorphous. The sulfide-based solid electrolyte can also be utilized in this amorphous state, but it may be subjected to a heat treatment to form a crystalline sulfide-based solid electrolyte. It can be expected to improve lithium ion conductivity by this crystallization.

(Filling of Active Material into Aluminum Porous Body)

For filling the active material (active material and solid electrolyte), publicly known methods such as a method of filling by immersion and a coating method can be employed. Examples of the coating method include a roll coating method, an applicator coating method, an electrostatic coating method, a powder coating method, a spray coating method, a spray coater coating method, a bar coater coating method, a roll coater coating method, a dip coater coating method, a doctor blade coating method, a wire bar coating method, a knife coater coating method, a blade coating method, and a screen printing method.

When the active material (active material and solid electrolyte) is filled, for example, a conduction aid or a binder is added as required, and an organic solvent or water is mixed therewith to prepare a slurry of a positive electrode mixture. An aluminum porous body is filled with this slurry by the above-mentioned method. As the conduction aid, for example, carbon black such as acetylene black (AB) or Ketjen Black (KB), or carbon fibers such as carbon nano tubes (CNT) may be used. As the binder, for example, polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF), polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), polyvinyl alcohol (PVA), carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC), xanthan gum and the like can be used.

The organic solvent used in preparing the slurry of a positive electrode mixture can be appropriately selected as long as it does not adversely affect materials (i.e., an active material, a conduction aid, a binder, and a solid electrolyte as required) to be filled into the aluminum porous body. Examples of the organic solvent include n-hexane, cyclohexane, heptane, toluene, xylene, trimethylbenzene, dimethyl carbonate, diethyl carbonate, ethyl methyl carbonate, propylene carbonate, ethylene carbonate, butylene carbonate, vinylene carbonate, vinyl ethylene carbonate, tetrahydrofuran, 1,4-dioxane, 1,3-dioxolan, ethylene glycol, and N-methyl-2-pyrrolidone. Further, when water is used as a solvent, a surfactant may be used for enhancing filling performance.

In addition, in a conventional positive electrode material for lithium batteries, an electrode is formed by applying an active material onto the surface of an aluminum foil. In order to increase a battery capacity per unit area, the application thickness of the active material is increased. Further, in order to effectively utilize the active material, the active material needs to be in electrical contact with the aluminum foil, and therefore, the active material is mixed with a conduction aid to be used. In contrast, the aluminum porous body according to the present invention has a high porosity and a large surface area per unit area. Thus, a contact area between the current collector and the active material is increased, and therefore, the active material can be effectively utilized, the battery capacity can be improved, and the amount of the conduction aid to be mixed can be decreased.

(Electrode for Capacitor)

FIG. 14 is a schematic sectional view showing an example of a capacitor manufactured by using the electrode material for a capacitor. An electrode material formed by supporting an electrode active material on an aluminum porous body is disposed as a polarizable electrode 141 in an organic electrolyte 143 partitioned with a separator 142. The polarizable electrode 141 is connected to a lead wire 144, and all these components are housed in a case 145. When the aluminum porous body is used as a current collector, the surface area of the current collector is increased and a contact area between the current collector and activated carbon as an active material is increased, and therefore, a capacitor that can realize a high output and a high capacity can be obtained.

In order to manufacture an electrode for a capacitor, a current collector of the aluminum porous body is filled with the activated carbon as an active material. The activated carbon is used in combination with a conduction aid or a binder.

In order to increase the capacity of the capacitor, the amount of the activated carbon as a main component is preferably in a large amount, and the amount of the activated carbon is preferably 90% or more in terms of the composition ratio after drying (after removing a solvent). The conduction aid and the binder are necessary, but the amounts thereof are preferably as small as possible because they are causes of a reduction in capacity and further the binder is a cause of an increase in internal resistance. Preferably, the amount of the conduction aid is 10 mass % or less and the amount of the binder is 10 mass % or less.

When the surface area of the activated carbon is larger, the capacity of the capacitor is larger, and therefore, the activated carbon preferably has a specific surface area of 1000 m²/g or more. As a material of the activated carbon, a plant-derived palm shell, a petroleum-based material or the like may be used. In order to increase the surface area of the activated carbon, the material is preferably activated by use of steam or alkali.

The electrode material predominantly composed of the activated carbon is mixed and stirred to obtain an activated carbon paste. This activated carbon paste is filled into the above-mentioned current collector and dried, and its density is increased by compressing with a roller press or the like as required to obtain an electrode for a capacitor.

(Filling of Activated Carbon into Aluminum Porous Body)

For filling of the activated carbon, publicly known methods such as a method of filling by immersion and a coating method can be employed. Examples of the coating method include a roll coating method, an applicator coating method, an electrostatic coating method, a powder coating method, a spray coating method, a spray coater coating method, a bar coater coating method, a roll coater coating method, a dip coater coating method, a doctor blade coating method, a wire bar coating method, a knife coater coating method, a blade coating method, and a screen printing method.

When the active material is filled, for example, a conduction aid or a binder is added as required, and an organic solvent or water is mixed therewith to prepare a slurry of a positive electrode mixture. An aluminum porous body is filled with this slurry by the above-mentioned method. As the conduction aid, for example, carbon black such as acetylene black (AB) or Ketjen Black (KB), or carbon fibers such as carbon nano tubes (CNT) may be used. As the binder, for example, polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF), polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), polyvinyl alcohol (PVA), carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC), xanthan gum and the like can be used.

The organic solvent used in preparing the slurry of a positive electrode mixture can be appropriately selected as long as it does not adversely affect materials (i.e., an active material, a conduction aid, a binder, and a solid electrolyte as required) to be filled into the aluminum porous body. Examples of the organic solvent include n-hexane, cyclohexane, heptane, toluene, xylene, trimethylbenzene, dimethyl carbonate, diethyl carbonate, ethyl methyl carbonate, propylene carbonate, ethylene carbonate, butylene carbonate, vinylene carbonate, vinyl ethylene carbonate, tetrahydrofuran, 1,4-dioxane, 1,3-dioxolan, ethylene glycol, and N-methyl-2-pyrrolidone. Further, when water is used as a solvent, a surfactant may be used for enhancing filling performance.

(Preparation of Capacitor)

The electrode obtained in the above-mentioned manner is punched out into an appropriate size to prepare two sheets, and these two electrodes are opposed to each other with a separator interposed therebetween. A porous film or nonwoven fabric made of cellulose or a polyolefin resin is preferably used for the separator. Then, the electrodes are housed in a cell case by use of required spacers, and impregnated with an electrolytic solution. Finally, a lid is put on the case with an insulating gasket interposed between the lid and the case and is sealed, and thereby an electric double layer capacitor can be prepared. When a nonaqueous material is used, materials of the electrode and the like are preferably adequately dried for decreasing the water content in the capacitor as much as possible. Preparation of the capacitor is performed in low-moisture environments, and sealing may be performed in reduced-pressure environments. In addition, the capacitor is not particularly limited as long as the current collector and the electrode of the present invention are used, and capacitors may be used which are prepared by a method other than this method.

Though as the electrolytic solution, both an aqueous system and a nonaqueous system can be used, the nonaqueous system is preferably used since its voltage can be set at a higher level than that of the aqueous system. In the aqueous system, potassium hydroxide or the like can be used as an electrolyte. Examples of the nonaqueous system include many ionic liquids in combination of a cation and an anion. As the cation, lower aliphatic quaternary ammonium, lower aliphatic quaternary phosphonium, imidazolium or the like is used, and as the anion, ions of metal chlorides, ions of metal fluorides, and imide compounds such as bis(fluorosulfonyl)imide and the like are known. Further, as the nonaqueous system, there is a polar aprotic organic solvent, and specific examples thereof include ethylene carbonate, diethyl carbonate, dimethyl carbonate, propylene carbonate, γ-butyrolactone and sulfolane. As a supporting salt in the nonaqueous electrolytic solution, lithium tetrafluoroborate, lithium hexafluoroborate or the like is used.

(Lithium-Ion Capacitor)

FIG. 15 is a schematic sectional view showing an example of a lithium-ion capacitor manufactured by using the electrode material for a lithium-ion capacitor. In an organic electrolytic solution 143 partitioned with a separator 142, an electrode material formed by supporting a positive electrode active material on an aluminum porous body is disposed as a positive electrode 146 and an electrode material formed by supporting a negative electrode active material on a current collector is disposed as a negative electrode 147. The positive electrode 146 and the negative electrode 147 are connected to a lead wire 148 and a lead wire 149, respectively, and all these components are housed in a case 145. When the aluminum porous body is used as a current collector, the surface area of the current collector is increased, and therefore, even when activated carbon as an active material is applied onto the aluminum porous body in a thin manner, a capacitor that can realize a high output and a high capacity can be obtained.

(Positive Electrode)

In order to manufacture an electrode for a lithium-ion capacitor, a current collector of the aluminum porous body is filled with activated carbon as an active material. The activated carbon is used in combination with a conduction aid or a binder.

In order to increase the capacity of the lithium-ion capacitor, the amount of the activated carbon as a main component is preferably in a large amount, and the amount of the activated carbon is preferably 90% or more in terms of the composition ratio after drying (after removing a solvent). The conduction aid and the binder are necessary, but the amounts thereof are preferably as small as possible because they are causes of a reduction in capacity and further the binder is a cause of an increase in internal resistance. Preferably, the amount of the conduction aid is 10 mass % or less and the amount of the binder is 10 mass % or less.

When the surface area of the activated carbon is larger, the capacity of the lithium-ion capacitor is larger, and therefore, the activated carbon preferably has a specific surface area of 1000 m²/g or more. As a material of the activated carbon, a plant-derived palm shell, a petroleum-based material or the like may be used. In order to increase the surface area of the activated carbon, the material is preferably activated by use of steam or alkali. As the conduction aid, Ketjen Black, acetylene black, carbon fibers or composite materials thereof may be used. As the binder, polyvinylidene fluoride, polytetrafluoroethylene, polyvinyl alcohol, carboxymethyl cellulose, xanthan gum and the like can be used. A solvent may be appropriately selected from water and an organic solvent depending on the type of the binder. In the organic solvent, N-methyl-2-pyrrolidone is often used. Further, when water is used as a solvent, a surfactant may be used for enhancing filling performance.

The electrode material predominantly composed of the activated carbon is mixed and stirred to obtain an activated carbon paste. This activated carbon paste is filled into the above-mentioned current collector and dried, and its density is increased by compressing with a roller press or the like as required to obtain an electrode for a lithium-ion capacitor.

(Filling of Activated Carbon into Aluminum Porous Body)

For filling of the activated carbon, publicly known methods such as a method of filling by immersion and a coating method can be employed. Examples of the coating method include a roll coating method, an applicator coating method, an electrostatic coating method, a powder coating method, a spray coating method, a spray coater coating method, a bar coater coating method, a roll coater coating method, a dip coater coating method, a doctor blade coating method, a wire bar coating method, a knife coater coating method, a blade coating method, and a screen printing method.

When the active material is filled, for example, a conduction aid or a binder is added as required, and an organic solvent or water is mixed therewith to prepare a slurry of a positive electrode mixture. An aluminum porous body is filled with this slurry by the above-mentioned method. As the conduction aid, for example, carbon black such as acetylene black (AB) or Ketjen Black (KB), or carbon fibers such as carbon nano tubes (CNT) may be used. As the binder, for example, polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF), polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), polyvinyl alcohol (PVA), carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC), xanthan gum and the like can be used.

The organic solvent used in preparing the slurry of a positive electrode mixture can be appropriately selected as long as it does not adversely affect materials (i.e., an active material, a conduction aid, a binder, and a solid electrolyte as required) to be filled into the aluminum porous body. Examples of the organic solvent include n-hexane, cyclohexane, heptane, toluene, xylene, trimethylbenzene, dimethyl carbonate, diethyl carbonate, ethyl methyl carbonate, propylene carbonate, ethylene carbonate, butylene carbonate, vinylene carbonate, vinyl ethylene carbonate, tetrahydrofuran, 1,4-dioxane, 1,3-dioxolan, ethylene glycol, and N-methyl-2-pyrrolidone. Further, when water is used as a solvent, a surfactant may be used for enhancing filling performance.

(Negative Electrode)

A negative electrode is not particularly limited and a conventional negative electrode for lithium batteries can be used, but an electrode, in which an active material is filled into a porous body made of copper or nickel like the foamed nickel described above, is preferable because a conventional electrode, in which a copper foil is used for a current collector, has a small capacity. Further, in order to perform the operations as a lithium-ion capacitor, the negative electrode is preferably doped with lithium ions in advance. As a doping method, publicly known methods can be employed. Examples of the doping methods include a method in which a lithium metal foil is affixed to the surface of a negative electrode and this is dipped into an electrolytic solution to dope it, a method in which an electrode having lithium metal fixed thereto is arranged in a lithium-ion capacitor, and after assembling a cell, an electric current is passed between the negative electrode and the lithium metal electrode to electrically dope the electrode, and a method in which an electrochemical cell is assembled from a negative electrode and lithium metal, and a negative electrode electrically doped with lithium is taken out and used.

In any method, it is preferred that the amount of lithium-doping is large in order to adequately decrease the potential of the negative electrode, but the negative electrode is preferably left without being doped by the capacity of the positive electrode because when the residual capacity of the negative electrode is smaller than that of the positive electrode, the capacity of the lithium-ion capacitor becomes small.

(Electrolytic Solution Used in Lithium-Ion Capacitor)

The same nonaqueous electrolytic solution as that used in a lithium battery is used for an electrolytic solution. A nonaqueous electrolytic solution is used in a polar aprotic organic solvent, and specific examples of the nonaqueous electrolytic solution include ethylene carbonate, diethyl carbonate, dimethyl carbonate, propylene carbonate, γ-butyrolactone and sulfolane. As a supporting salt, lithium tetrafluoroborate, lithium hexafluoroborate, an imide salt or the like is used.

(Preparation of Lithium-Ion Capacitor)

The electrode obtained in the above-mentioned manner is punched out into an appropriate size, and is opposed to the negative electrode with a separator interposed between the punched out electrode and the negative electrode. The negative electrode may be an electrode doped with lithium ions by the above-mentioned method, and when the method of doping the negative electrode after assembling a cell is employed, an electrode having lithium metal connected thereto may be arranged in the cell. A porous film or nonwoven fabric made of cellulose or a polyolefin resin is preferably used for the separator. Then, the electrodes are housed in a cell case by use of required spacers, and impregnated with an electrolytic solution. Finally, a lid is put on the case with an insulating gasket interposed between the lid and the case and is sealed, and thereby a lithium-ion capacitor can be prepared. Materials of the electrode and the like are preferably adequately dried for decreasing the water content in the lithium ion capacitor as much as possible. Preparation of the lithium ion capacitor is performed in low-moisture environments, and sealing may be performed in reduced-pressure environments. In addition, the lithium ion capacitor is not particularly limited as long as the current collector and the electrode of the present invention are used, and capacitors may be used which are prepared by a method other than this method.

(Electrode for Molten Salt Battery)

The aluminum porous body can also be used as an electrode material for molten salt batteries. When the aluminum porous body is used as a positive electrode material, a metal compound such as sodium chromite (NaCrO₂) or titanium disulfide (TiS₂) into which a cation of a molten salt serving as an electrolyte can be intercalated is used as an active material. The active material is used in combination with a conduction aid and a binder. As the conduction aid, acetylene black or the like may be used. As the binder, polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) and the like may be used. When sodium chromite is used as the active material and acetylene black is used as the conduction aid, the binder is preferably PTFE because PTFE can tightly bind sodium chromite and acetylene black.

The aluminum porous body can also be used as a negative electrode material for molten salt batteries. When the aluminum porous body is used as a negative electrode material, sodium alone, an alloy of sodium and another metal, carbon, or the like may be used as an active material. Sodium has a melting point of about 98° C. and a metal becomes softer with an increase in temperature. Thus, it is preferable to alloy sodium with another metal (Si, Sn, In, etc.). In particular, an alloy of sodium and Sn is preferred because of its easiness of handleability. Sodium or a sodium alloy can be supported on the surface of the aluminum porous body by electroplating, hot dipping, or another method. Alternatively, a metal (Si, etc.) to be alloyed with sodium may be deposited on the aluminum porous body by plating and then converted into a sodium alloy by charging in a molten salt battery.

FIG. 16 is a schematic sectional view showing an example of a molten salt battery in which the above-mentioned electrode material for batteries is used. The molten salt battery includes a positive electrode 121 in which a positive electrode active material is supported on the surface of an aluminum skeleton of an aluminum porous body, a negative electrode 122 in which a negative electrode active material is supported on the surface of an aluminum skeleton of an aluminum porous body, and a separator 123 impregnated with a molten salt of an electrolyte, which are housed in a case 127. A pressing member 126 including a presser plate 124 and a spring 125 for pressing the presser plate is arranged between the top surface of the case 127 and the negative electrode. By providing the pressing member, the positive electrode 121, the negative electrode 122 and the separator 123 can be evenly pressed to be brought into contact with one another even when their volumes have been changed. A current collector (aluminum porous body) of the positive electrode 121 and a current collector (aluminum porous body) of the negative electrode 122 are connected to a positive electrode terminal 128 and a negative electrode terminal 129, respectively, through a lead wire 130.

The molten salt serving as an electrolyte may be various inorganic salts or organic salts which melt at the operating temperature. As a cation of the molten salt, one or more cations selected from alkali metals such as lithium (Li), sodium (Na), potassium (K), rubidium (Rb) and cesium (Cs), and alkaline earth metals such as beryllium (Be), magnesium (Mg), calcium (Ca), strontium (Sr) and barium (Ba) may be used.

In order to decrease the melting point of the molten salt, it is preferable to use a mixture of at least two salts. For example, use of potassium bis(fluorosulfonyl)amide (K—N(SO₂O₂; KFSA) and sodium bis(fluorosulfonyl)amide (Na—N(SO₂F)₂; NaFSA) in combination can decrease the battery operating temperature to 90° C. or lower.

The molten salt is used in the form of a separator impregnated with the molten salt. The separator prevents the contact between the positive electrode and the negative electrode, and may be a glass nonwoven fabric, a porous resin molded body or the like. A laminate of the positive electrode, the negative electrode, and the separator impregnated with the molten salt housed in a case is used as a battery.

EXAMPLES

Hereinafter, the present invention will be described in more detail based on examples, but the present invention is not limited thereto.

Example 1 (Formation of Conductive Layer)

A urethane foam having a porosity of 95%, about 50 pores (cells) per inch, a pore diameter of about 550 μm, and a thickness of 1 mm was prepared as a urethane resin molded body and was cut into a 100 mm×30 mm square. A film of aluminum was formed on the surface of the polyurethane foam in a weight per unit area of 10 g/m² by sputtering to form a conductive layer.

(Molten Salt Plating)

The urethane foam having a conductive layer formed on the surface thereof was loaded as a piece of work in a jig having an electricity supply function, and then the jig was placed in a glove box, the interior of which was adjusted to an argon atmosphere and low moisture (a dew point of −30° C. or lower), and was dipped in a molten salt aluminum plating bath (33 mol % EMIC-67 mol % AlCl₃) at a temperature of 40° C. The jig holding the piece of work was connected to the cathode of a rectifier, and an aluminum plate (purity 99.99%) of the counter electrode was connected to the anode. In this case, operating conditions were adjusted by employing a smaller distance between electrodes, and plating the piece of work under the condition of a high current density so that the amount of plating of outer surface portions in the thickness direction of the piece of work was larger than that of a central portion in the thickness direction. Specifically, the conditions are as shown in Table 1, each of a distance between electrodes was set to 10 mm on both sides of the piece of work, and a direct current having a current density of 10 A/dm² was applied for 33 minutes to perform plating, and thereby, an aluminum structure in which an aluminum plated layer having a weight per unit area of 150 g/m² was formed on the surface of the urethane foam. Stirring was performed with a stirrer using a Teflon (registered trademark) rotor. Here, the current density was calculated based on the apparent area of the urethane foam.

(Decomposition of Resin Foam Molded Body)

Each of the above-mentioned aluminum structures was dipped in a LiCl—KCl eutectic molten salt at a temperature of 500° C., and a negative potential of −1 V was applied to the aluminum structure for 30 minutes. Air bubbles resulting from the decomposition reaction of the polyurethane were generated in the molten salt. Then, the aluminum structure was cooled to room temperature in the atmosphere and was washed with water to remove the molten salt, to obtain an aluminum porous body 1 from which the resin had been removed. The obtained aluminum porous body had continuous pores and a high porosity as with the urethane foam used as a core material.

(Processing of End Part of Aluminum Porous Body)

The thickness of the obtained aluminum porous body was adjusted to 0.96 mm by roller pressing, and the aluminum porous body was cut into a piece of 5 cm square.

As preparation of welding, a SUS block (rod) having a width of 5 mm and a hammer were used as a compressing jig, and the SUS block was placed at a location 5 mm from one end of the aluminum porous body and the porous body was compressed by beating the SUS block with the hammer to form a compressed part having a thickness of 100 μm.

Thereafter, a tab lead was welded by spot welding under the following conditions.

<Welding Condition>

Welding apparatus: HI-MAX 100 manufactured by Panasonic Corporation, model No. YG-101 UD

-   -   (Voltage can be applied up to 250 V)     -   Capacity: 100 Ws, 0.6 kVA

Electrode: Copper electrode of 2 mm in diameter

Load: 8 kgf

Voltage: 140 V

<Tab Lead>

Material: aluminum

Dimension: width 5 mm, length 7 cm, thickness 100 μm

Surface condition: boehmite treatment

An opening of the obtained aluminum porous body 1 was filled with an epoxy resin and a cross section was exposed by polishing. Then, the cross section of the porous body was observed with a microscope and its photograph was taken. The photograph was divided into three regions in the thickness direction of the porous body and these regions were defined as a region 1, a region 2 and a region 3. Then, a proportion of an area of aluminum in each region was calculated by image processing.

The results are as shown in Table 1, and the proportion of an area of aluminum was 35% in the region 1, 30% in the region 2, and 35% in the region 3. A ratio of the average of the areas of aluminum in the region 1 and the region 3 to the area of aluminum in the region 2 was 1.17.

Example 2

An aluminum porous body 2 was obtained in the same manner as in Example 1 except for performing the operations on a piece of work in the following manner in the step of molten salt plating in Example 1.

In the molten salt plating of aluminum, a larger distance between electrodes was employed, and plating was performed under the condition of a low current density to prepare an aluminum porous body in which the amounts of aluminum in the portions to respectively become the regions 1 to 3 were uniform. Specific conditions are as shown in Table 1, the piece of work was used as a cathode, each of a distance between electrodes was set to 100 mm on both sides, and a direct current having a current density of 2 A/dm² was applied for 172 minutes to perform plating.

Subsequently, the porous body was used as an anode, a smaller distance between electrodes was employed, and only a small amount of aluminum was dissolved under the condition of a high current density. Specifically, the piece of work was used as a cathode, each of a distance between electrodes was set to 10 mm on both sides, and a direct current having a current density of 10 A/dm² was applied for 2 minutes to dissolve a small amount of aluminum. The obtained aluminum porous body 2 had a weight per unit area of 150 g/m².

A cross section of the obtained aluminum porous body 2 was observed in the same manner as in Example 1.

The results are as shown in Table 1, and the proportion of an area of aluminum was 31% in the region 1, 38% in the region 2, and 31% in the region 3. A ratio of the average of the areas of aluminum in the region 1 and the region 3 to the area of aluminum in the region 2 was 0.82.

Example 3

An aluminum porous body 3 was obtained in the same manner as in Example 1 except for performing the operations on a piece of work in the following manner in the step of molten salt plating in Example 1.

In the molten salt plating of aluminum, by using the piece of work as a cathode, employing a smaller distance between electrodes on one side of the piece of work, and employing a larger distance between electrodes on the other side of the piece of work, an aluminum porous body, in which the amount of aluminum in one half portion in the thickness direction was large, was prepared. Specific conditions are as shown in Table 1, the piece of work was used as a cathode, a distance between electrodes on one side (side to become a region 4) was set to 10 mm, a distance between electrodes on the other side (side to become a region 5) was set to 100 mm, and a direct current having a current density of 5 A/dm² was applied for 65 minutes. The obtained aluminum porous body 3 had a weight per unit area of 150 g/m².

A cross section of the obtained aluminum porous body 3 was observed in the same manner as in Example 1. A microphotograph was divided into two regions in the thickness direction of the porous body and one region was defined as a region 4 and the other region was defined as a region 5. Then, a proportion of an area of aluminum in each region was determined in the same manner as in Example 1.

The results are as shown in Table 1, and the proportion of an area of aluminum was 55% in the region 4 and 45% in the region 5. A ratio of the average area of aluminum in the region 4 to the area of aluminum in the region 5 was 1.22.

Example 4

Two urethane foams (referred to as pieces of work A and C, respectively) were prepared in the same manner as in Example 1 except that the thickness was 0.33 mm and the cell diameter was 100 μm, and a urethane foam (referred to as a piece of work B) was prepared in the same manner as in Example 1 except that the thickness was 0.34 mm and the cell diameter was 100 μm.

Then, aluminum porous bodies A to C were obtained by performing the same operations as in Example 1 except for using the pieces of work A to C and plating the pieces of work with aluminum under the following conditions.

—Regarding Pieces of Work A, C—

The piece of work was used as a cathode, each of a distance between electrodes was set to 100 mm on both sides, and a direct current having a current density of 2 A/dm² was applied for 57 minutes. The obtained aluminum porous bodies A and C each had a weight per unit area of 57 g/m².

—Regarding Piece of Work B—

The piece of work was used as a cathode, each of a distance between electrodes was set to 100 mm on both sides, and a direct current having a current density of 2 A/dm² was applied for 38 minutes. The obtained aluminum porous body B had a weight per unit area of 36 g/m².

The obtained aluminum porous bodies A to C were laminated with the aluminum porous body B sandwiched between the aluminum porous bodies A and C, and were unified by heating while applying pressure to obtain an aluminum porous body 4.

A cross section of the obtained aluminum porous body 4 was observed in the same manner as in Example 1.

The results are as shown in Table 1, and the proportion of an area of aluminum was 38% in the region 1, 24% in the region 2, and 38% in the region 3. A ratio of the average of the areas of aluminum in the region 1 and the region 3 to the area of aluminum in the region 2 was 1.58.

Example 5

Two urethane foams (referred to as pieces of work D and F, respectively) were prepared in the same manner as in Example 1 except that the thickness was 0.33 mm and the cell diameter was 100 μm, and a urethane foam (referred to as a piece of work E) was prepared in the same manner as in Example 1 except that the thickness was 0.34 mm and the cell diameter was 100 μm.

Then, aluminum porous bodies E to F were obtained by performing the same operations as in Example 1 except for using the pieces of work E to F and plating the pieces of work with aluminum under the following conditions.

—Regarding Pieces of Work D, F—

The piece of work was used as a cathode, each of a distance between electrodes was set to 100 mm on both sides, and a direct current having a current density of 2 A/dm² was applied for 45 minutes. The obtained aluminum porous bodies D and F each had a weight per unit area of 42 g/m².

—Regarding Piece of Work E—

The piece of work was used as a cathode, each of a distance between electrodes was set to 100 mm on both sides, and a direct current having a current density of 2 A/dm² was applied for 72 minutes. The obtained aluminum porous body E had a weight per unit area of 66 g/m².

The obtained aluminum porous bodies D to F were laminated with the aluminum porous body E sandwiched between the aluminum porous bodies D and F, and were unified by heating while applying pressure to obtain an aluminum porous body 5.

A cross section of the obtained aluminum porous body 5 was observed in the same manner as in Example 1.

The results are as shown in Table 1, and the proportion of an area of aluminum was 28% in the region 1, 44% in the region 2, and 28% in the region 3. A ratio of the average of the areas of aluminum in the region 1 and the region 3 to the area of aluminum in the region 2 was 0.64.

Example 6

Two urethane foams (referred to as pieces of work G and H, respectively) were prepared in the same manner as in Example 1 except that the thickness was 0.50 mm.

Then, aluminum porous bodies G to H were obtained by performing the same operations as in Example 1 except for using the pieces of work G and H and plating the pieces of work with aluminum under the following conditions.

—Regarding Piece of Work G—

The piece of work was used as a cathode, each of a distance between electrodes was set to 100 mm on both sides, and a direct current having a current density of 2 A/dm² was applied for 100 minutes. The obtained aluminum porous body G had a weight per unit area of 93 g/m².

—Regarding Piece of Work H—

The piece of work was used as a cathode, each of a distance between electrodes was set to 100 mm on both sides, and a direct current having a current density of 2 A/dm² was applied for 60 minutes. The obtained aluminum porous body H had a weight per unit area of 57 g/m².

The obtained the aluminum porous bodies G and H were laminated, and unified by heating while applying pressure to obtain an aluminum porous body 6.

A cross section of the obtained aluminum porous body 6 was observed in the same manner as in Example 3.

The results are as shown in Table 1, and the proportion of an area of aluminum was 62% in the region 4 and 38% in the region 5. A ratio of the average area of aluminum in the region 4 to the area of aluminum in the region 5 was 1.63.

Comparative Example 1

An aluminum porous body 7 was obtained in the same manner as in Example 1 except for performing the operations on a piece of work in the following manner in the step of molten salt plating in Example 1.

The piece of work was used as a cathode, each of a distance between electrodes was set to 100 mm on both sides, and a direct current having a current density of 2 A/dm² was applied for 162 minutes. The obtained aluminum porous body 7 had a weight per unit area of 150 g/m².

A cross section of the obtained aluminum porous body 7 was observed in the same manner as in Example 1.

The results are as shown in Table 1, and the proportion of an area of aluminum was 33.3% in the region 1, 33.4% in the region 2, and 33.3% in the region 3. A ratio of the average of the areas of aluminum in the region 1 and the region 3 to the area of aluminum in the region 2 was 1.00.

TABLE 1 Thickness Distance Weight Amount of aluminum of porous Current between per unit Distribution resin body Piece of density electrodes Time area in thickness Region [mm] work [A/dm²] [mm] [minute] (g/m²) Area ratio direction Example 1 1-3 1 Cathode 10  10 on both 33 150 Region 1: 1.17 sides 35% Region 2: 30% Region 3: 35% Example 2 1-3 1 Cathode 2 → 10 100 on both 172 → 2 150 Region 1: 0.82 → Anode sides → 10 on 31% both sides Region 2: 38% Region 3: 31% Example 3 4-5 1 Cathode 5 10 (on region 65 150 Region 4: 1.22 4 side) 55% 100 (on region Region 5: 5 side) 45% Example 4 A 0.33 Cathode 2 100 on both 62 57 38% 1.58 sides B 0.34 Cathode 2 100 on both 38 36 24% sides C 0.33 Cathode 2 100 on both 62 57 38% sides Example 5 D 0.33 Cathode 2 100 on both 45 42 28% 0.64 sides E 0.34 Cathode 2 100 on both 72 66 44% sides F 0.33 Cathode 2 100 on both 45 42 28% sides Example 6 G 0.5 Cathode 2 100 on both 100  93 62% 1.63 sides H 0.5 Cathode 2 100 on both 60 57 38% sides Comparative 1-3 1 Cathode 2 100 on both 162  150 Region 1: 1 Example 1 sides 33.3%   Region 2: 33.4%   Region 3: 33.3%  

[Evaluation] —Preparation of Lithium Secondary Battery—

A lithium cobalt oxide powder (positive electrode active material) having an average particle diameter of 5 μm was prepared as an active material, and the lithium cobalt oxide powder, acetylene black (conduction aid) and PVDF (binder) were mixed in proportions of 90:5:5 in terms of mass %. N-Methyl-2-pyrrolidone (organic solvent) was added dropwise to the mixture, and the resulting mixture was mixed to prepare a paste-like slurry of a positive electrode mixture.

Next, the slurry of a positive electrode mixture was filled into samples 1 to 7 of the aluminum porous bodies prepared in Examples 1 to 6 and Comparative Example 1 so as to make the amounts of the positive electrode mixtures uniform in the samples. Thereafter, each slurry was dried at 100° C. for 40 minutes to remove the organic solvent and the aluminum porous body was compressed by roller pressing (roll gap 0.2 mm) to obtain positive electrode samples 1 to 7. Each positive electrode had a thickness of 500 μm and a capacity per an area of 10 mAh/cm².

An electrolytic solution type lithium secondary battery was prepared in the following manner by using each of the positive electrode samples 1 to 7 described above.

A positive electrode obtained by punching out the samples 1 to 7 into a size of 14 mm diameter was used. A lithium metal foil (diameter: 15 mm, thickness: 500 μm) was used as a negative electrode, and the positive electrode (positive electrode sample) and the negative electrode were laminated with a separator made of polypropylene interposed therebetween. This laminate was housed in a coin type battery case having a positive electrode case and a negative electrode case, respectively made of stainless steel, and then an organic electrolytic solution was poured in the battery case. A mixture obtained by dissolving LiClO4 in an amount of 1 mol % in a mixed organic solvent of propylene carbonate and 1,2-dimethoxyethane (volume ratio of 1:1) was used as the organic electrolytic solution. After pouring the organic electrolytic solution, a gasket made of a resin was inserted between the positive electrode case and the negative electrode case, and the positive electrode case and the negative electrode case were caulked with each other to seal the inside to prepare a coin-shaped electrolytic solution type lithium secondary battery.

Such a battery for evaluation was prepared using each positive electrode sample. In addition, in any case where the positive electrode samples were used, a leaf spring was not inserted between the positive electrode sample and the positive electrode case.

The electrolytic solution type lithium secondary batteries using the positive electrode samples 1 to 7 were evaluated in the following manner.

(Evaluation of Rate Characteristics)

For evaluation, a charge-discharge cycle having a charge current and a discharge current of respectively 3 mA and a voltage range of 4.2 V to 2.0 V was performed, and a discharge capacity was measured. After the battery was charged at a charge current of 3 mA, the discharge capacity was measured at a discharge current of 10 mA, and at a discharge current of 50 mA, and a ratio thereof to the discharge capacity measured at discharge currents of 3 mA was determined.

As shown in Table 2, it is found that Example 1 or 4 is superior in the rate characteristics (current collecting performance) to Comparative Example 1.

(Evaluation of Cycle Characteristics)

Moreover, a charge-discharge cycle test was performed in order to investigate a battery life. For evaluation, a charge-discharge cycle having a charge current and a discharge current of respectively 3 mA and a voltage range of 4.2 V to 2.0 V was performed, and a change in a discharge capacity was measured. After checking the capacities after performing the charge-discharge cycle one hundred times and the charge-discharge cycle one thousand times, the battery was disassembled and its internal state was observed. A capacity at the time of the first discharge is used as a standard, and the discharge capacity is shown in terms of a proportion relative to the standard.

As shown in Table 2, it is found that Example 2 or 5 is superior in cycle characteristics (holding performance of active material) to Comparative Example 1. Further, the battery after 1000 cycles was disassembled and its internal state was observed, and consequently the active material was exfoliated from the electrode and was free into the electrolytic solution in Comparative Example 1. It was found from this result that Example 2 or 5 holds the active material more firmly and is advantageous to the cycle characteristics.

(Bending Workability)

Negative electrode samples 3, 6 and 7 were obtained in the same manner as in the positive electrode sample except for using the samples 3, 6 and 7 of the aluminum porous bodies prepared in Examples 3 and 6 and Comparative Example 1 and using lithium titanium oxide having an average particle diameter of 5 μm as an active material.

The positive electrode samples 3, 6 and 7 were cut into a size of 45 mm wide and 230 mm long, and an aluminum lead wire was welded thereto. The negative electrode samples 3, 6 and 7 were also cut into a size of 45 mm wide and 280 mm long. A separator was cut into a size of 50 mm wide and 500 mm long and was folded, and the positive electrode 3 was sandwiched between the folded separator, and the negative electrode 3 was overlaid thereon and wound with the negative electrode exposed outward to obtain a group of electrodes. Similarly, a group of electrodes was obtained, which was formed by using a pair of the positive electrode 6 and the negative electrode 6 and a pair of the positive electrode 7 and the negative electrode 7 and winding them. In addition, with respect to Example 3 or Example 6, winding was performed in such a way that a side including a larger amount of aluminum was located on outer side.

This group of electrodes was inserted into a negative electrode battery case for a 18650 cylindrical battery, and the lead wire of the positive electrode was welded to a positive electrode lid with a resin gasket. A mixture obtained by dissolving LiClO4 in an amount of 1 mol % in a mixed organic solvent of propylene carbonate and 1,2-dimethoxyethane (volume ratio of 1:1) was poured into a case as an electrolytic solution, and the positive electrode lid and the negative electrode case were caulked with each other to seal the inside to obtain a cylindrical lithium secondary battery of 18 mm in diameter and 65 mm in height. Thereafter, the incidence of short circuit after winding and assembling was investigated in order to evaluate the bending workability of an electrode.

As shown in Table 2, it was found that the incidence of short circuit after winding of Example 3 or 6 is lower than that of Comparative Example 1.

TABLE 2 Rate characteristics Cycle characteristics (current collecting (holding performance Incidence of performance) of active material) short circuit Discharge Discharge After After after winding capacity at capacity at 100 1000 [%] (bending 10 mA 50 mA cycles cycles workability) Example 1 100 91 — — — Example 2 — — 101 89 — Example 3 — — — — 0.2 Example 4 101 95 — — — Example 5 — — 101 94 — Example 6 — — — — 0.1 Compar- 100 85 100 77 1.2 ative Example 1

The present invention has been described based on embodiments, but it is not limited to the above-mentioned embodiments. Variations to these embodiments may be made within the scope of identity and equivalence of the present invention.

INDUSTRIAL APPLICABILITY

When the three-dimensional network aluminum porous body of the present invention is used as a base material of an electrode, the current collecting performance of a central portion in the thickness direction of an electrode can be improved and the internal availability ratio of an active material can be improved. Moreover, the holding performance of an active material can be improved. Also, the bend-working performance can be improved. Therefore, it can be suitably used as a base material in performing industrially continuous manufacture of electrodes, for example, for nonaqueous electrolyte batteries (lithium battery, etc.), and a capacitor and a lithium-ion capacitor each using a nonaqueous electrolytic solution.

REFERENCE SIGNS LIST

1: Resin molded body

2: Conductive layer

3: Aluminum-plated layer

21 a, 21 b: Plating bath

22: Strip-shaped resin

23, 28: Plating bath

24: Cylindrical electrode

25, 27: Anode

26: Electrode roller

32: Compressing jig

33: Compressed part

34: Aluminum porous body

35: Rotating roller

36: Rotation axis of roller

37: Tab lead

38: Insulating/sealing tape

41: Winding off roller

42: Compressing roller

43: Compressing-welding roller

44: Filling roller

45: Drying machine

46: Compressing roller

47: Cutting roller

48: Wind-up roller

49: Lead supply roller

50: Slurry supply nozzle

51: Slurry

60: Lithium battery

61: Positive electrode

62: Negative electrode

63: Electrolyte layer

64: Positive electrode layer (positive electrode body)

65: Current collector of positive electrode

66: Negative electrode layer

67: Current collector of negative electrode

121: Positive electrode

122: Negative electrode

123: Separator

124: Presser plate

125: Spring

126: Pressing member

127: Case

128: Positive electrode terminal

129: Negative electrode terminal

130: Lead wire

141: Polarizable electrode

142: Separator

143: Organic electrolytic solution

144: Lead wire

145: Case

146: Positive electrode

147: Negative electrode

148: Lead wire

149: Lead wire 

1. A three-dimensional network aluminum porous body, comprising a sheet-shaped three-dimensional network aluminum porous body for a current collector in which an amount of aluminum forming a skeleton of the three-dimensional network aluminum porous body is uneven in a thickness direction thereof.
 2. The three-dimensional network aluminum porous body according to claim 1, wherein when a cross section in the thickness direction of the three-dimensional network aluminum porous body is divided into three regions of a region 1, a region 2 and a region 3 in this order, an average of an amount of aluminum in the region 1 and an amount of aluminum in the region 3 differs from an amount of aluminum in the region
 2. 3. The three-dimensional network aluminum porous body according to claim 2, wherein a ratio of the average of the amount of aluminum in the region 1 and the amount of aluminum in the region 3 to the amount of aluminum in the region 2 is 1.1 or more.
 4. The three-dimensional network aluminum porous body according to claim 2, wherein a ratio of the average of the amount of aluminum in the region 1 and the amount of aluminum in the region 3 to the amount of aluminum in the region 2 is 0.9 or less.
 5. The three-dimensional network aluminum porous body according to claim 1, wherein when a cross section in the thickness direction of the three-dimensional network aluminum porous body is divided into two regions of a region 4 and a region 5, a ratio of an amount of aluminum in the region 4 to an amount of aluminum in the region 5 is 1.1 or more.
 6. The three-dimensional network aluminum porous body according to claim 1 formed by laminating three sheets of aluminum porous bodies A, B and C in this order in the thickness direction to be unified, wherein a ratio of an average of a weight per unit area of the aluminum porous body A and a weight per unit area of the aluminum porous body C to a weight per unit area of the aluminum porous body B is 1.1 or more.
 7. The three-dimensional network aluminum porous body according to claim 1 formed by laminating three sheets of aluminum porous bodies D, E and F in this order in the thickness direction to be unified, wherein a ratio of an average of a weight per unit area of the aluminum porous body D and a weight per unit area of the aluminum porous body F to a weight per unit area of the aluminum porous body E is 0.9 or less.
 8. The three-dimensional network aluminum porous body according to claim 1 formed by laminating two sheets of aluminum porous bodies G and H in this order in the thickness direction to be unified, wherein a ratio of a weight per unit area of the aluminum porous body G to a weight per unit area of the aluminum porous body H is 1.1 or more.
 9. An electrode, comprising using the three-dimensional network aluminum porous body according to claim
 1. 10. A nonaqueous electrolyte battery, comprising using the electrode according to claim
 9. 11. A capacitor using a nonaqueous electrolytic solution, comprising using the electrode according to claim
 9. 12. A lithium-ion capacitor using a nonaqueous electrolytic solution, comprising using the electrode according to claim
 9. 